[Continued from Part 1]
The term ὕβρις ‘hubris’ was used in Greek philosophy to
refer to the supposed impiety involved in delving into the realms of god(s). It
describes a personality of extreme or foolish pride or dangerous overconfidence
(ironically like Satan). This pride is often in combination with arrogance. It
typically describes behavior that defies the norms of behavior (challenges God)
by violating the natural order.
The Greek word for sin, hamartia / ἁμαρτία, originally meant "missing the mark” or “error" so poets like Hesiod and Aeschylus used the word "hubris" to describe transgressions against the gods. A common way that hubris was committed was when a mortal claimed to be better than a god in a specific skill or attribute… which is tantamount to...a sin.
The Greek word for sin, hamartia / ἁμαρτία, originally meant "missing the mark” or “error" so poets like Hesiod and Aeschylus used the word "hubris" to describe transgressions against the gods. A common way that hubris was committed was when a mortal claimed to be better than a god in a specific skill or attribute… which is tantamount to...a sin.
Similar ideas are apparent in some contemporary genetic
thinking which views nature, specifically genetic as sacred and therefore
inviolable. In other words, its uninfringeable or unchallengeable. You can’t
touch it. However, the biblical doctrine of creation has clearly demythologized
nature of these semi-divine Hellenistic overtones and given humankind earthly
dominion over creation and a very specific mandate to care for the earth
(stewardship) and its biological diversity (Genesis 1:28, 30; 2:15-20), a
mandate that, if anything, was made even more explicit after the Fall (Genesis
9:1-3).
We are called not to ‘play God’ but to be responsible
stewards of all that God has given.
A Christian who finds scientific knowledge
and medical knowledge in their repertoire has quite a different fear to contend
with. To those that much is given much will be expected. Not the fear of having
used said talent incorrectly but rather the fear that his God should judge them
guilty of neglecting their steward’s responsibilities by failing to pursue the
use of his/her gifts. Gifts used in opportunities for good that may be created
by new developments like genetics and medical discoveries. We should approach
such responsibilities not with the hubris and arrogance implicit in the phrase
‘playing God’, but with prayerful concern that we should be responsible
earth-keepers under God.
The applications of genetic modification to farming provide
good examples of what such stewardship can involve. About one-third to one-half
of all agricultural production world-wide is lost to pests and diseases, and
there is enormous scope for GMO to render crops resistant to pests, drought and
frost, to improve yields and to enable food to be produced in harsh
environments. Meanwhile there are millions starving on the continent of Africa
annually. The central Christian concern should be to utilize the new technology
to feed a hungry world and to distribute its benefits more equitably. Is there
a risk using GMO? Yes. They risk of dying from starvation in Africa without it
is far greater. Until you walk a mile in another’s shoes…
Doctors, scientists, biohackers and those that will allow
for the ethical use of genetics modification for the betterment of humanity
that are seeking to stave of crippling diseases and starvation are certainly
not playing God in the ‘traditional’ sense. Instead I believe they are
answering their charge to be good curators/keepers of the Earth and be ‘Good
Samaritans’. Like it or not we are our brother’s keeper (Genesis 4:9). We are
responsible spiritually to God for other people.
Has it ever dawned on those venomously stonewalling genetic
medical uses that you are potentially causing suffering to other Christians
unwittingly (and non)? We “sit together in the heavenly places…” (Ephesians
2:6). “If one member suffers, all the members suffer with it…” (1 Corinthians
12:26). If you allow physical selfishness, mental ignorance by refusal to
educate yourself, moral insensitivity, or spiritual weakness, everyone around
you suffers.
Genetic
Engineering Will Remove Suffering Needed for Character-Building
This one
kind of goes along with the previous. Some fear that biohacking will ultimately
remove the opportunity for moral growth which is demanded for caring for the
sick and disabled. There is also an essence added to a human being that only
can be added through suffering and trial. Those that have gone through
suffering understand this. Those that have not, I feel sorry for. There is no
substitute for toiling and the sense of accomplishment it rewards. To overcome.
I believe this is overstating the case though. Genetics will not trump
suffering and disease completely. This is likely a mis-framing of the context.
This fear is
based on an exaggerated view of the scope/potential of genetic manipulation and
biohacks. The most that genetic manipulation can achieve is to generate some
useful new drugs and remove some lethal genes from human genomes. Even if all
this were achieved, it would be a negligible proverbial drop in the ocean of
human suffering. Why did Jesus’ heal? Jesus did not leave human diseases
untouched to preserve the moral benefits that caring for the sick might
generate. Jesus performed miracles and drove diseases out as a demonstration of
the kingdom of God (e.g. Matthew 9:35; Luke 9:2; 10:9). They were literally
signs. One of the words in Greek in the Gospels for miracle is σημεῖον /
semeion or literally a sign. A sign of what? A pointer or sign to the Kingdom.
He was healing to heal per se but rather to point people to what a mattered. The
promises an power of God.
We do not
know whether any diseases Jesus healed had a genetic basis. That isn’t the
point at all. The Bible is not a book of medicine but rather of Salvation. Regardless, the Gospel record certainly
provides no basis for genetic passivity. As members spliced into God’s new
family we were/are called to identify with Christ in his work of liberating
creation ‘from its bondage to decay’ (Romans 8:21). We are to use our gifts to
do so too. To move the Kingdom forward. I am convinced this includes healing
via genetics.
No comments:
Post a Comment